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Discover important advice for college life, from laundry tips to credit card offers, campus etiquette to academic success strategies, and roommate communication to personal safety measures. Make the most of your college experience!
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Welcome to College What makes this different from High School?
Laundry Mom’s not here to do it and its not free! Some Basic Laundry Tips: • Wash all colors in cold water • Anything 100% cotton will shrink in the dryer • Don’t mix whites and bright colors • For the soft fresh scent, use a laundry sheet in the dryer • Don’t stuff too much in the dryer because it won’t get dry and it will cost you more in the end. • Treat Stains immediately with a spot treatment and cold water, hot water sets stains
Credit Card OffersYou’ve never been so popular! Credit cards companies will send offers fast and furious to start you on the road to debt • Talk credit cards over with your parents • Every time you apply (for all those free things • they offer) it decreases your credit rating • If you decide to have one, get only one to build your credit • Pay it off every month • Shop around for a low interest rate and watch the small writing (intro APRs of 0% often skyrocket to 20% after a few months)
Your college ID Your life on a piece of plastic • Your ID Card is your life – don’t loose it • If you do loose it, report it immediately and get it replaced • Always carry it with you!
The NeighborhoodYes there is life beyond your residence hall • People who live in the neighborhood are not “anti” college student • They are “anti” disruptive noise which impacts their ability to get a good nights sleep for them or their children • They are “anti” trash on their yard and street since it decreases property value and just looks bad • You are a transitional part of this neighborhood, people who live here were here before you were and will be here after you leave, respect them. • Think of the neighbors and their property as if it were your parents or grandparents property and treat them and their property accordingly.
Cafeteria and Take OutThe good news is, its all you can eat, the bad news is, its all you can eat • Watch for the “Freshman 15” – just because you can have more, doesn’t mean you should • Ordering take out adds up, (both cost wise and calorie wise) use it as a treat or reward, not as a standard • Only take what you can eat, you can go back for more and waste costs you in the long run (higher food costs) • Choose healthy options and if there are not enough, talk to food service.
The 24-7 FactorMad at someone? See them everywhere! • In High School you went home at the end of the day • In College you’ll the same people everywhere, all day and night • Resolve conflicts, forgive others and take time for yourself
Your Voice, your ChoiceIf you see a problem, work toward a solution • Students make a difference! • Find out how decisions are made and get involved. Run for an office, go to a meeting, student input really counts. • You are an adult now, your parents aren’t here to fix things. If something needs to be changed, you have the power to work toward those changes.
Stay around and you won’t drown • Don’t go home on the weekends • The more involved you are in college, the more successful you will be • You will enjoy college much more if you stay around on the weekends – you’ll make friends faster and feel at home sooner
AcademicsPapers, papers and more papers • Your syllabus is your Bible, sit down right away and write in all assignments, tests and papers on a semester calendar. Your professors expect you to follow it and will not remind you of due dates • Plan ahead, many things are due at once and waiting until the last minute won’t cut it • Get help as soon as you are having a hard time, there are many support services to help you (in all subject areas) • Do the reading, professors will test you on things they do not cover
Visit professors during office hours, they are there to help • Meet with your advisor and plan your college career early, that way you will be able to graduate on time • Balance your fun with your studies, it is hard to recover from one poor semester – your GPA is cumulative • Ask upperclassmen for help and advice • Make studies a priority
Roommates • Do a roommate agreement, even if you don’t think you need to! • Review it often • Talk to your roommate as soon as problems arise, don’t let them build up • Get help in solving problems if you can’t do it on your own • Communicate! Your roommate(s) can’t read your mind and you can’t read theirs.
FreedomI’m as free as a bird now Every choice has a consequence No one will be there to make sure you get up Balance fun and work and you’ll have more fun There is always more time to have fun, but when a paper is due, its due All things in moderation
Security • Most thefts at college are done by other college students • Make sure you always lock your door • Don’t give out your combination or make a copy of your key for anyone • Communicate with your roommate about who can have access • Don’t leave money laying around • Take home valuables over long breaks
Community Music is just one example of some of the differences that exist on your floor and in your hall. Country Top 40 Rap
Get to know others who are different • Respect others by talking to them when you have a problem • Be considerate of others, before you act ask yourself “Would I like it if someone did this to me?” • Get involved in planning activities on the floor
Leaving Others Behind • From friends to family, there will be people you miss. Work on maintaining those relationships, but make sure you take time to get to know new friends too. • If you have a favorite pet you will miss consider volunteering at a pet shelter or seeing if a professor has a pet who needs some extra love.